The United States and Saudi Arabia have resumed defence talks, which started just days after Riyadh had hosted US and Russian officials to discuss the two countries' diplomatic relations and the Ukraine war, showcasing the Kingdom’s role as an international mediator and its valued status as a major US ally.
Accompanied by top-level delegations, the Saudi Defence Minister Prince Khalid bin Salman and US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth held extensive consultations for enhancing strategic ties. Emphasising the crucial nature of Saudi-US cooperation, Prince Khalid said that living in a “turbulent region” makes it necessary to coordinate bilateral efforts to “ensure stability in the region and the world.”
Considering the various concerned players and a highly complex political and security situation in the Middle East, InStrat Nonresident Fellow Sabena Siddiqui explores for The New Arab where these talks may be heading, towards a deeper strategic alliance, or indeed, a purely interest-driven partnership.
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This article is part of the Polistratics | InStrat collaboration program.
Sabena Siddiqui is a foreign affairs journalist and geopolitical analyst who focuses on the Belt and Road Initiative, the Middle East, and South Asia.